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*
Austin Research Institute, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia; and
John Curtin School of Medical Research, Department of Human Genetics, Canberra, Australia
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Recent structural studies, including crystallization of class I
molecules of H2 and HLA molecules with bound peptides, have delineated
how peptides bind within the groove of class I molecules. Peptides of 8
to 10 amino acids, usually with defined anchor motifs, bind with high
affinity (7); however, peptides lacking such motifs (8, 9, 10), including
MUC1, can also bind to class I molecules, albeit with low affinity, and
can be detected by high avidity anti-MUC1 CTLs (11). The structural
studies performed thus far indicate that the class I-presented peptides
are buried within the groove of class I, leaving little of the peptide
exposed for the direct interaction of class I and peptide with the
Ig-like T cell
ß receptor. Peptides presented by mouse H2 (12, 13)
or human HLA (14, 15, 16, 17, 18) molecules have revealed a number of striking
similarities in that: 1) the peptides are anchored in the cleft by
amino acids binding in specific pockets; 2) the mode of peptide binding
appears to be canonical, irrespective of whether the peptide is 8, 9,
or 10 amino acids in length, and the main chain conformation at the
ends of the peptides is essentially the same; and 3) the central
portion of the peptide bulges out of the cleft (12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18) and can be
detected by CTLs. The binding sites on the TCR are imposed by the shape
of the complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) that recognize the
homologous site of the peptides and the edges of the class I groove.
Given the structural similarity of TCR and Ig complementarity-determing
regions, it is not surprising that Abs have been described that bind
with contiguous amino acids in class I and bound peptide (i.e.,
MHC-peptide specific (19)) or with the unique configuration of the
peptide imposed by the class I groove (20). The lack of Ab reactivity
with peptides in the groove using Abs that react with the linear
structure of "free" (non-class I-bound) peptides has been explained
by the suggestion that the sequences of the peptides are hidden within
the class I groove. To date, no study has matched Ab-binding sites in a
free peptide with the same sites in the peptide bound to class I
molecules.
We now describe MUC1 Abs, which react with linear peptides (in the absence of class I molecules) and which also detect MUC1 peptides while bound in the groove of class I molecules. These findings suggest that peptides that "loop" out of the groove, or in which the C-terminal end is free (i.e., not anchored), can be accessible to such Abs. Abs targeted to epitope residues that are anchored and therefore buried (e.g., N-terminal) do not react with the peptide in the groove. Molecular modeling, used to provide a rational explanation for the observations, shows that peptides bind in a nonconventional manner, particularly at the C-terminal end, leading to their exposure and availability for Ab binding.
| Materials and Methods |
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MHC class I molecules in the murine cell line RMA-S (C57BL/6 TAP-deficient cells) are unable to engage endogenous peptides. Empty class I molecules formed in this cell line are unstable at physiologic conditions (37°C) and are not expressed in sufficient amounts to be detected by anti-class I Abs, but are expressed in considerable quantities at the surface at reduced temperatures (26°C) or if cultured with a "presentable" peptide. This distinction can be used to measure the direct binding of peptides to class I molecules. RMA-S cells were incubated overnight with 20-µM 9-mer peptides at 26°C for 3 h and were used either in flow cytometry (see below) or as targets in a CTL assay. For competitive binding of MUC1 peptides, RMA-S cells were pulsed with 20 µM Kb (SAPDTRPAP) peptide and increasing amounts SIINFEKL (020 µM) for 3 h and then stained by anti-MUC1 peptide Abs. Percentage of binding of Abs to cells was calculated as the percentage of Ab binding to cells pulsed with peptide - percentage of Ab binding negative control. In addition, HLA-A*0201 EBV-immortalized B cells pulsed with 20 µM MUC1 peptide were used as targets or for direct binding of anti-MUC1 mAbs by flow cytometry.
To prepare PHA (PHA-L; leucoagglutinin, Sigma, St. Louis, MO) blast cells, 2 x 106 C57BL/6, or class I-deficient ß2-microglobulin mouse spleen cells were placed into wells of a 24-well plate with 1 µg/ml PHA and incubated for 2 days at 37°C in 10% CO2 to form blast cells. PHA blast cells were then incubated overnight with 20 µM MUC1 peptides and tested for the ability of anti-MUC1 Abs to bind by flow cytometry. We optimized the culture conditions that generated low spontaneous release of 51Cr and high levels of expression of MHC class I molecules from PHA blast cells.
CTL assay
Spleen cells from C57BL/6 and HLA-A*0201 transgenic mice,
immunized i.p. with M-FP (5 µg of the 39-kDa MUC1 fusion protein
coupled to oxidized mannan), were obtained 7 days after the third
immunization, washed in PBS containing 2% FCS, and used directly in a
51Cr release assay (6, 21, 22). Cells were
radiolabeled with 100 µCi of
Na251CrO4 (51Cr)
(Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) for 60 min at 37°C. For inhibition
assays, target cells were preincubated with various dilutions of Abs
for
15 min at room temperature before being added to effector cells.
A constant E:T ratio was used at 100:1.
Abs and flow cytometry
The anti-MUC1 Abs used, which detect discrete MUC1 epitopes,
were: VA1 (amino acids: APG), VA2 (amino acids: DTRPA), BC2 (amino
acids: APDTR), BCP8 (amino acids: DTR), BCP9 (amino acids: GSTAP),
BCP10 (amino acids: RPAP), and STAP31 (amino acids: AH) (Table I
) (23, 24, 25). One hundred microliters of
various dilutions of ascites (neat =
1 mg/ml) was added to a
pellet of 2 x 105 cells (RMA-S peptide-loaded
cells, HLA-A*0201 EBV-immortalized B-cells, or splenocyte PHA blasts)
and incubated for 1 h at 4°C. After washing with 0.5 ml
phosphate buffer, 100 µl 1:50 dilution of FITC-conjugated sheep
(Fab')2 anti-mouse Ig (Silenus, Melbourne, Australia)
was added and incubated for 45 min at 4°C; after further washing, the
cells were analyzed by flow cytometry using a FACScan flow
cytometer.
|
To investigate how the peptides SAPDTRPAP (H2Kb), APGSTAPPA (H2Db), SAPDTRPAP, and STAPPAHGV (HLA-A*0201) might bind to class I molecules, these peptides were modeled into the Ag-binding clefts of H2Kb, H2Db, and HLA-A*0201. modeling was performed with the HOMOLOGY, BUILDER, and DISCOVER programs from the Insight II package (Biosym, San Diego, CA) and made use of the crystal structures of H2Kb complexed with the SEV peptide (FAPGNYPAL) (13), H2Db complexed with the influenza virus nucleoprotein (NP)2 peptide NP366374 (ASNENMDAM) (26) and HLA-A*0201 complexed with the LLFGYPVYV (HTLV-1 tax1119) and ILKEPVHGV (HIV-1 RT276484) peptides (17) as templates. The STAPPAHGV peptide was modeled using the ILKEPVHGV template, while the SAPDTRPAP peptide was modeled using both templates, since this allowed an initial conformation of R (P6) to point either into or out of the cleft). Initially, each crystal structure was truncated at residue 185 with the C-terminal residue protected with an N-methyl group; hydrogen atoms were then introduced with the BUILDER program. Energy minimization and dynamics were then performed as previously described (18).
| Results |
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Anti-MUC1 peptide Abs block class I-restricted CTL activity
The peptide SAPDTRPAP is presented by H2Kb
molecules and, using Abs that identify different sites on this peptide
(BC2, VA2, BCP8, and BCP10) (Table I
), it was possible to block CTL
lysis of MUC1+ target cells by some of the Abs (VA2, BCP8,
and BCP10) (Fig. 1
A).
There was no blocking by BC2 (to the N-terminal APDTR), however, Abs to
the middle part of the peptide (DTR or DTRPA residues detected by BCP8
and VA2 Abs, respectively) could block CTL lysis, as could the BCP10 Ab
to the C-terminal RPAP. There was no blocking by the anti-GSTAP Ab
(BCP9) or anti-APG (VA1) Abs, which are not part of the class
I-bound epitope and serve as controls (Fig. 1
A).
Thus, Abs to the mid- and C-terminal, but not the N-terminal, parts of
the SAPDTRPAP peptide could block CTLs.
|
MUC1 peptides binding to HLA-A*0201 molecules were also accessible,
because some anti-MUC1 Abs blocked CTL lysis of HLA-A*0201 cells
(Fig. 1
C). Four potentially relevant Abs were
available for the examination of how epitopes in the bound peptide were
accessible: BC2 (APDTR, N-terminal peptide); BCP8 (DTR, midpeptide);
VA2 (DTRPA) and BCP10 (RPAP, C-terminal peptides); and BCP9 (GSTAP,
negative Ab). Target cells (HLA-A*0201-EBV-B cells) were pulsed with
SAPDTRPAP, separately incubated with the five Abs, and mixed with
effector cells. It was found that Abs BCP8, BCP10, and VA2 inhibited
CTL lysis to a similar degree (Fig. 1
C, Table I
),
demonstrating the binding of the Ab to an accessible epitope, whereas
BC2 and the nonreactive BCP9 had no effect. It appeared that the Abs
were reacting directly with the peptides bound in the groove of the
class I molecules, and subsequent studies were aimed at proving this
hypothesis.
Ab detection of MUC1 peptides presented by H2Kb and H2Db class I molecules
RMA-S cells were loaded with peptide, washed, incubated with
anti-MUC1 Abs and analyzed by flow cytometry. When cells exposed to
the Kb peptide (SAPDTRPAP) were tested using Abs that react
with different parts of the 9 mer, the BC2 (APDTR), VA1 (APG), and BCP9
(GSTAP) Abs were nonreactive, but the Abs VA2 (DTRPA), BCP8 (DTR), and
BCP10 (RPAP) bound to RMA-S cells (Fig. 2
A; Table I
). Thus, the amino
acid residues at the N terminus (SAPDTR ... ) appeared to be
inaccessible (no reaction with Ab BC2), whereas middle (... DTR
... ) and C terminal (... RPAP) amino acids could bind Abs. The
BCP9 Ab to the nonbound GSTAP peptide did not react, providing a
suitable specificity control.
|
Similar results were found with C57BL/6 PHA blast splenocytes pulsed with peptide SAPDTRPAP (for Kb) or APGSTAPPA (for Db), in that specific binding of anti-MUC1 Abs occurred, whereas when using peptide-pulsed inbred C57BL/6 class I-deficient ß2-microglobulin PHA blast splenocytes, no binding of anti-MUC1 Abs occurred (not shown).
We also noted that Abs VA2 (DTRPA), BCP8 (DTR), and BCP10 (RPAP)
reacted with one of the HLA-A*0201 binding peptides (SAPDTRPAP)
presented by HLA-A*0201-EBV-B cells (Table I
), whereas BC2 (APDTR), VA1
(APG), and BCP9 (GSTAP; a control Ab) were nonreactive. In addition,
HLA-A*0201-EBV-B cells pulsed with the second (high affinity) binding
peptide (see below), HLA-A*0201 STAPPAHGV, were not detected by STAP31
(to amino acids AH); and control Ab BCP8 (DTR) was nonreactive (not
shown). We lacked Abs to the N and C termini of the STAPPAHGV peptide,
which would be appropriate, but of the Abs that were available, the
pattern of reactivity as measured by flow cytometry was the same for
HLA-A*0201 as for H2Kb and H2Db class I
molecules.
Blocking H2Kb MUC1 peptide and Ab binding by SIINFEKL, the high affinity H2Kb OVA peptide
As MUC1 peptides bind in the groove of class I molecules in a
mode that can be detected by anti-MUC1 peptide Abs, it follows,
therefore, that if MUC1 peptide binding was specifically blocked or
inhibited by the binding of a high affinity competing peptide, then Ab
binding should also not occur. As we had previously demonstrated that
the OVA H2Kb binding peptide SIINFEKL competitively
inhibited anti-MUC1 CTL lysis (11), RMA-S cells were incubated with
SIINFEKL at increasing concentrations (020 µM) in the presence of a
constant amount of MUC1 peptide (20 µM), and Ab binding was examined.
In the presence of 5 µM SIINFEKL, inhibition of Ab binding
occurred with both VA2 (detecting the midpeptide epitope, ...
DTRPA.) and BCP10 (C-terminal epitope, ... . . RPAP) (Fig. 3
B); increasing amounts
of SIINFEKL (1020 µM) completely inhibited Ab binding (Fig. 3
, C and D). RMA-S cells in the presence of
no peptide are shown in Figure 3
A. The BC2 Ab (N-terminal
epitope, APDTR ... ) again did not bind. These findings provide
strong evidence that anti-MUC1 Abs bind to MUC1 peptide bound in
the groove of class I molecules, but not when the peptide is displaced
by a high affinity peptide.
|
Computer modeling was used to assess how the peptides
SAPDTRPAP and APGSTAPPA could bind H2Kb and
H2Db, respectively, and which parts of the peptides could
be exposed to Ab. The possible peptide conformers (from a putative side
elevation if located in a class I molecule), are illustrated in Figure 4
. For both peptides, it is seen that the
general shape is bow-like, with the central residues (P4P7) forming
the apex of the bow. Interestingly, it is residues in this region that
are recognized by the anti-MUC1 Abs and TCR molecules. Anti-MUC1
Abs recognize the motifs DTR, DTRPA, and RPAP (Fig. 1
; Table I
),
further implicating D (P4) and T (P5) in recognition. For example, DT
is known to be crucial for recognition by the BCP8 Ab, and Figure 4
A shows that these residues are upward facing, solvent
exposed, and therefore accessible to Ab. In contrast, nearly all
residues crucial for recognition by BC2 (APDTR) (25, 30) are buried (A
and P at the N terminus; downward pointing R), which explains the lack
of reaction of this Ab. Interestingly, in each of these motifs an R is
present, yet in the model, R (P6) projects downward into the cleft, and
Ab would not be available for detection. One possibility is that R is
not important for recognition and that DT (P4P5) or PA (P7P8), also
accessible to solvent, are sufficient. Alternatively, crystallographic
studies of peptides binding to class I have shown that the central part
of the peptide is very flexible, and a different orientation of R (P6)
cannot be excluded. However, the model affords a third explanation, in
that R155 of class I may be acting as a substitute for the R (P6).
Mutational studies or use of the Kbm1 class I mutant (31)
(Kbm1 has mutations at 152, 155, and 156) could be used to
establish the orientation of the peptide. The SAPDTRPAP peptide is
able to offer some stability to the H2Kb complex (11),
since it can be detected by CTLs. Figure 5
A shows some of the
interactions that may rationalize the stability and how the peptide
might be oriented in the cleft. In the model, R (P6) forms a salt
bridge to E24, as well as a hydrogen bond to N70 and S99, and thus acts
as a good anchor residue for the peptide. Although Y and F are
considered the standard anchor residues to bind to this part of
H2Kb (7), other peptides, for example SRDHSRTPM (32), which
lacks these residues, have been found to be high affinity binders for
this class I molecule. The N terminus of the SAPDTRPAP sequence is
supported by canonical hydrogen bonds to conserved residues Y159 and
Y171. Notably, however, the C terminus of the SAPDTRPAP peptide does
not appear to form any strong intermolecular links, suggesting poor
binding to H2Kb in this region.
|
|
Molecular modeling of HLA-A*0201 class I/MUC1 peptide interactions
To investigate possible modes of HLA-A*0201 peptide binding, the
peptides SAPDTRPAP and STAPPAHGV were computer modeled into the
Ag-binding cleft of HLA-A*0201 (17). The models showed that the
STAPPAHGV peptide, which contains a standard anchor residue (V) at P9,
binds in the canonical way (not shown). This peptide is stabilized by
hydrogen bonds involving residues Y7, Y159, and Y171 at the N terminus
and D77, Y84, and W147 at the C terminus (not shown), as is usually the
case in canonically bound peptides (12); K66 holds the N terminus down.
By contrast, modeling indicated the significant deviation of the
SAPDTRPAP peptide backbone as compared with STAPPAHGV (Fig. 6
). At the N terminus, the SAPDTRPAP
peptide is well anchored, forming six strong hydrogen bonds between MHC
residues E63, Y99, Y159, and Y171 and peptide residues S (P1) and T
(P2) (not shown, Fig. 6
). Thus, the modeling studies predict normal
anchoring residues, which was confirmed by affinity studies in which
the STAPPAHGV peptide bound with higher affinity than SAPDTRPAP (11).
The complexed SAPDTRPAP peptide can be detected by VA2 (DTRPA) and BCP9
(DTR) Abs to the midregion and by BCP10 (RPAP) to the C terminus, but
not by BC2 to the N terminus. A single hydrogen bond is likely to form
between the backbone of P (P7) and T73, but there are no predicted
interactions to other C-terminal peptide residues. Thus, the C terminus
of the peptide is not well anchored in the groove and is predicted to
loop out of the cleft, thereby exposed for Ab binding, with the peptide
as a whole still anchored in the groove by the N terminus. There are
several reasons for the poor fit of SAPDTRPAP to the HLA-A*0201 cleft.
First, HLA-A*0201 has an R at position 97 at the base of the cleft;
this large positively charged residue prevents R (P6) in the MUC1
peptide from acting as a secondary anchor by both steric and
electrostatic effects. Also, the proline at the C terminus of the
peptide prevents the formation of at least one peptide stabilizing
hydrogen bond generally conserved in known peptide/MHC complexes.
Further, P (P7), A (P8), and P (P9) are all nonpolar residues, and thus
their side chains are unable to form hydrogen bonds or salt links with
HLA-A*0201. A second model of the SAPDTRPAP-class I complex was also
constructed (data not shown), orienting the peptide to project R (P6)
down into the cleft. The resulting structure, after a conformational
search with high temperature molecular dynamics, had a unique
C-terminal structure in that the peptide did not reach to the end of
the cleft, and a salt bridge was formed between R (P6) and the C
terminus of the peptide. The N terminus, however, remained essentially
canonical. Taken together, the models suggest reasons for poor binding
of the C terminus of the SAPDTRPAP peptide and lend support to the
notion that this part of the peptide may not be bound in the groove and
is thus available for detection by the RPAP (BCP10) Ab. In addition,
the modeling predicts that SAPDTRPAP would not bind as strongly as
STAPPAHGV (because the former lacks the V anchor at P9), which has been
confirmed by affinity studies (11, 29).
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
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The studies were performed in three ways: first, by blocking CTL effectors with anti-peptide Abs; second, by the detection of class I-bound peptide with Abs using flow cytometry; and third, by molecular modeling to explain how these peptides could bind to the class I groove and be accessible to both Abs and T cells. The findings are unusual, indeed to our knowledge are unique, for although rare Abs binding to class I and peptide complexed together have been described (19, 20), in our study the Abs react only with the peptide. The ability to detect such peptides by Abs is likely to be due to three different reasons. First, we have a unique collection of Abs, which detect seven epitopes in the 20-amino acid MUC1 peptide and can detect different sites on the 9-mer peptides bound by class I molecules. Second, we can induce CTLs with ease by targeting the mannose receptor on macrophages (11, 21, 22, 28, 29). Third, the detection appears to result from the novel way in which low affinity MUC1 peptides bind in the groove, wherein the N terminus is buried, the middle portion arches upward to be free (and available for Ab detection), and with some peptides, the C terminus is also free and available to react with Ab. In addition to the peptides being bound in the MHC groove, which we assume to be the case because they are targets of T cells, there are two other possible interpretations to consider: 1) peptides binding to the cell surface separate from MHC molecules and 2) peptides binding to MHC class I molecules, but outside the groove. Regarding the first possibility, it is most unlikely that peptides bind to the cell surface in places other than with class I molecules, as the Abs did not detect peptides bound to cells of different haplotypes (22), and in the absence of class I molecules (in mice lacking ß2-microglobulin), there were no CTLs (22) and no reactivity with anti-MUC1 Abs. Thus, not only must class I molecules be present, they must be of the right haplotype to bind the peptide, and it is most unlikely that the peptides bind elsewhere than to class 1 molecules.
The second proposition, that peptides bind both inside the cleft (for detection by T cells) and on the class I molecule outside the cleft (which bind Ab), is also unlikely. The ability of anti-MUC1 peptide Abs to block CTL-mediated lysis is relevant, although such Abs could also block (by steric hindrance) if bound to peptides outside the groove. However, when competing peptides, e.g., SIINFEKL used in excess amounts (to prevent MUC1 peptide binding in the groove), then the Ab reactivity disappears (and anti-MUC1 CTLs no longer lyse cells), leading to the conclusion that binding occurs only in the groove (11). We were fortunate in having a collection of mAbs that react with sequential amino acids in the highly immunogenic APDTR region of the MUC1 VNTR sequence spanning peptides that can also be presented by class I molecules for recognition by CTLs. Some of the Abs were made by immunizing with breast cancer cell lines, others to purified mucins, yet others to synthetic peptides (23, 24, 25). The APDTR region, predictably, is the most immunogenic, and most of the anti-MUC1 peptide Abs characterized to date react within this region. The Abs detect sequential amino acids defined by using the "pin" technique, wherein peptides tethered at the C terminus can be used to map epitopes (23, 24, 25). Most of the MUC1 peptides can clearly and reproducibly be detected by these Abs in solid phase (e.g., ELISA), liquid phase, and on pins, and as these reactions are mostly independent of the secondary structure of the peptide, the conformation taken by the peptide in the class I groove would not be expected to alter their reactivity with Abs. However, why have such reactions not been found previously? Recently, there have been several descriptions of Abs recognizing peptide/class I interactions in which contiguous epitopes including both peptide and class I molecules were necessary for the reaction with Ab. Such descriptions include Abs bound to either OVA257264, vesicular stomatic virus NP5259, or influenza NP345360 peptides in complex with class I (19); other Abs have been shown to bind to viral peptides together with class I (38), to hen egg lysozyme peptide complexed with class II (39), or to influenza hemagglutinin (HA)255262 (20) (here, the peptide was of high affinity and only four amino acids in length was exposed to the TCR). Our peptides bound with a much lower affinity (11) and were likely to be less buried and hence more accessible to Ab. In our studies, it is apparent that the same peptide sequence (SAPDTRPAP) can be presented by multiple H2 class I molecules (11). As in to the HIV1 permissive peptides of Berzovsky and colleagues (40), in whose study there is broad recognition of cytotoxic T cell epitopes from the HIV-1 envelope protein with multiple class I histocompatibility molecules, it is interesting to consider that all of these peptides could be exposed to bind not just to the TCR (perhaps in the absence of a direct MHC contribution) but also to Ab, as shown herein.
A second feature of importance in this study was the ability to easily
generate CTLs to MUC1 peptides by targeting the mannose receptor (21, 22). Strangely, no CTL clones for MUC1 have been described, and their
use would have aided this study. It is likely that the low affinity
binding MUC1 peptides generate high avidity CTLs with high frequency
(41), and in other studies, low affinity peptide-MHC interactions could
lead to the induction of effective CTLs (42). We have since
demonstrated that the H2Kb-, H2Db-, and
HLA-A*0201-binding MUC1 peptides bind with low affinity to class I;
however the high avidity CTLs were generated (11, 29), in these cases
the low affinity peptides lack defined anchor motifs. Since the MUC1
peptide binding to H2Kb, H2Db, and HLA-A*0201
did not contain defined anchors, it is possible that the MUC1 peptides
bind to the class I groove in an unusual manner, particularly as they
are accessible to anti-peptide Abs (shown by flow cytometry) (Fig. 2
; Table I
) and by the ability of anti-MUC1 Abs to block CTLs (Fig. 1
; Table I
). The Ab reaction with the H2Kb- or
HLA-A*0201-binding peptide (SAPDTRPAP) is likely to occur with a loop
(e.g., DTR) and to the free C-terminal end; the N terminus is buried
and not accessible to Abs, all of which are features predicted by the
computer-generated models (
Figs. 35![]()
![]()
). The Ab binding to APGSTAPPA in
H2Db is likely to occur in the GSTAP loop; the N and C
termini of the peptide and not being accessible to Abs. Similarly, an
Ab to the -AH- epitope was nonreactive with the canonical
HLA-A*0201-binding peptide, STAPPAHGV. The experimental
observations of Ab binding and the structural modeling were completely
consistent. Although 8- to 9-amino acid peptides are required to make
full contact and sit snugly in the class I groove, it is not unusual
for loops to be formed in the peptide backbone. Indeed, loops have been
described using peptides longer than 9 amino acids, when the bulging of
the peptide backbone is more prominent (17) as it loses hydrogen
bonding interactions with the MHC in the central peptide region. For
example, a peptide that has anchoring amino acids for H2Kb
(Y at P5 and L at P8) is the Sendai virus NP324332
(FAPGNYPAL), which forms a kink at P4 and P5 causing these amino acids
to make few contacts with the residues of the class I cleft (13). A
similar observation was also noted for HLA-Aw68 and the influenza flu
NP peptide (KTGGPIYKR), which kinks out from the cleft at P3 and P4,
resulting in no hydrogen bonds with residues of the cleft for P4P7
(34). It should also be noted that there are prolines present in these
two peptides that disrupt hydrogen bonding of the peptide to the class
I cleft (43). The MUC1 H2Kb/HLA-A*0201 (SAPDTRPAP) and
H2Db (APGSTAPPA) peptides are rich in prolines, which may
assist in the MUC1 peptides looping out from the class I cleft to
expose the central region or the C terminus. These issues could be
investigated by using the panel of Kbm class I mutant mouse
strains, in which the effects of particular class I amino acid
substitutions on peptide binding, accessibility to Ab, and effects on T
cell recognition could be evaluated. In a recent study, peptides eluted
from HLA class I molecules were found to lack the consensus C-terminal
hydrophobic or positively charged amino acids (44); it would be of
interest to see whether the C termini of these peptides are solvent
exposed and also accessible to anti-peptide Abs.
In conclusion, it is clear that anti-MUC1 peptide Abs can react with specific peptides in the groove of class I molecules, shown by blocking CTLs and directly by flow cytometry with anti-MUC1 Abs. Computer-generated models provided a structural basis for interpretation of the data. The findings are unique, no doubt due to the availability of Abs detecting sequential MUC1 epitopes, the ease of generation of CTLs by mannose receptor targeting, and the unique way in which MUC1 peptides of low affinity are likely to bind in the class I groove. Modeling studies suggested that although the N terminus was buried (and inaccessible), the middle region was accessible to MUC1 Abs as was, at times, some poorly anchored C termini. The findings demonstrate that not all peptides need to be firmly anchored to be detected by CTLs and that the MUC1 peptide Ab system could be useful in detecting peptide-class I interactions.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Abbreviations used in this paper: NP, nucleoprotein; HA, hemagglutinin. ![]()
Received for publication December 30, 1997. Accepted for publication March 9, 1998.
| References |
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M. Ito, S. Shichijo, N. Tsuda, M. Ochi, N. Harashima, N. Saito, and K. Itoh Molecular Basis of T Cell-mediated Recognition of Pancreatic Cancer Cells Cancer Res., March 1, 2001; 61(5): 2038 - 2046. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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I F C McKENZIE and V APOSTOLOPOULOS Towards immunotherapy of pancreatic cancer Gut, June 1, 1999; 44(6): 767 - 769. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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